Transcript Document
Chapter Five
Personal Values
Influence Ethical
Choices
Chapter Preview: Personal Values
Influence Ethical Choices
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Developing a strong sense of character
How values are formed
Value conflicts and how to resolve them
Making ethical decisions based on
personal values
• Corporate crime and steps to eliminate
it
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5-2
Character, Integrity and Moral Development
• Character is composed of your personal
standards of behavior including:
– Honesty
– Integrity
– Moral strength
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5-3
Integrity: A Dimension of Character
• Integrity is congruence between what
you
– know
– say
– do
• Practicing what you believe
demonstrates integrity
• Critical to successful relationships
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5-4
A Valued Character Trait
• People with integrity do what they say
they will do
• Are clear about what they stand for
• Think hard about what is right and
wrong
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5-5
The Corrosion of Character
• Richard Sennett believes decline of
character can be traced to:
– economic conditions
• fast-paced, high stress
• information-driven
– limited connections
• past
• neighbors
• selves
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5-6
Character Development
• Integrity can be developed
• Make and keep promises to self and
others
• Many organizations and educational
institutions believe in character training
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5-7
Six Pillars of Character
• According to the Josephson Institute of
Ethics:
– Trustworthiness
– Responsibility
– Caring
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Respect
Fairness
Citizenship
5-8
Total Person Insight
People working together with integrity
and authenticity and collective
intelligence are profoundly more
effective as a business than people
living together based on politics, game
playing, and narrow self-interest.
Peter Senge
Author, The Fifth Discipline
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5-9
Personal Values
• Values are personal beliefs and
preferences that influence one’s
behavior
• Deep-seated in personality
• Exist at different levels of awareness
• Awareness of values enhances integrity
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5 - 10
Five-Part Valuing Process to Clarify and
Develop Values
• Thinking
– critical thinking
– distinguishing fact from opinion
• Feeling
– listening to “gut level”
• Communicating
– listening closely
– interacting with others
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5 - 11
Five-Part Valuing Process to Clarify and
Develop Values
• Choosing
– being well informed
• Acting
– repeatedly and consistently
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5 - 12
Identifying Your Core Values
• Core values are those that consistently
rank higher than others
• General principles and beliefs that guide
intermediate and long-term goals
• Influence the behavior of individuals and
organizations
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5 - 13
Values and Job Selection
• We often must choose among core
values
– High salary
– Security
– Meaningful work
– Lots of time off
• Most choices require compromising at
least one
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Values Shaping Influences
• Major influences that shape our values
are:
– People
– Events
– Family
– Religious groups
– Schools
– The media
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5 - 16
Family
• Parents assume many roles
• Most important role is moral teacher
• Challenges to families:
– single-parent households
– two parents working outside the home
– care for elderly parents
– financial pressures
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5 - 17
Religious Groups
• Value priorities often developed through
religious training
– Religious doctrine
– Role models
• Many now seeking spiritual and moral
anchors in both personal lives and work
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Schools
• Some see character education as
fundamental aspect of education
• Values clarification common part of
curriculum in 70s
• Objections and fears about imposing
values, so much was eliminated
• Resurgence in the movement today
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5 - 19
Media
• Viewers often see
– people abusing and degrading each other
without consequences
– violence and antisocial behavior
• Research connecting television viewing
and
– depression
– desensitization of children
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5 - 20
People We Admire
• Modeling is shaping behavior to be like
people you admire
• Important for children and adults
• Leaders in the workplace are important
models for adults
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5 - 21
Avoiding Values Drift
• Values drift is the slow erosion of core
values over time
– exposure to conflicting situations
– pressure to compromise
• Reflect on core values when making
decisions at work
• Choose appropriate ethical behavior to
maintain integrity
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5 - 22
Avoiding Values Drift
• Organizations must constantly ask the
following questions:
– What do we stand for?
– Why do we exist?
• Successful companies, through
constant monitoring, adapt to a
changing environment without losing
sight of core values
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5 - 23
Values Conflicts
• Differences between individual’s
personal values is major cause of
values conflict
• Problems may be due to conflicts
between worker’s and the manager’s
value systems
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5 - 24
Values Conflicts
• Organizations should look for value
conflicts when addressing
organizational problems
– Declining quality
– Absenteeism
– Poor customer service
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Total Person Insight
If you want young people to take
notions like right and wrong
seriously, there is an indispensable
condition: they must be in the
presence of adults who take right
and wrong seriously.
William J. Bennett
Author, The Book of Virtues
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Internal Values Conflicts
• Internal values conflict occurs when a
person is caught between two or more
strongly held values.
• Value clarification minimizes conflicts
• Value ranking makes decisions easier
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Values Conflicts with Others
• Interpersonal conflicts may arise
between workers of different:
– Ages
– Races
– Cultures
– Ethnic backgrounds
– Gender
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Values Conflicts with Others
• Can be highly emotional issues that
disrupt friendships, work teams, and
productivity
• Often based on
– Interpretations of work ethics
– Priorities of work life and personal life
• Responses to situations can be difficult
and may require compromise
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Personal Values and Ethical Choices
• Ethics are principles that define
behavior as
– right
– good
– proper
• Provides means of evaluating and
deciding among options
• Rules that direct your conduct and
moral judgments
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5 - 30
Personal Values and Ethical
Choices
• Jobs often present ethical dilemmas
• Each organization has different ethical
standards
• Some feel pressure to violate ethical
standards to meet business objectives
• Often faced with multiple options
– Rarely just one right and one wrong
answer
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5 - 31
The Right Choices
• Learn to distinguish between right and
wrong
– Seek your employer’s code of ethics or the
ethical code of your professional
organization
– Ask an experienced or trusted colleague
– Restrain from choosing wrong path
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5 - 32
The Right Choices
• Make sure your values are in harmony
with those of your employer
– Leads to success for individuals and
organizations
– Provides a strong bond among all
members of a work force
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5 - 33
The Right Choices
• Don’t let your life be driven by the desire
for immediate gratification
– People are often under pressure to show
the trappings of success
– Progress and prosperity have same
meaning to many
– Often means compromising values
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Total Person Insight
Nothing is more powerful for employees
than seeing their managers behave
according to their expressed values and
standards: nothing is more devastating
to the development of an ethical
environment than a manager who
violates the organization’s ethical
standards.
Dan Rice and Craig Dreilinger
Authors, Rights and Wrongs of Ethics
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5 - 35
Corporate Values and Ethical Choices
• Good corporate citizens consistently
make ethical decisions in the best
interest of
– Employees
– Customers
– Stockholders
– The community
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Corporate Values and Ethical Choices
• Organizations get into serious trouble
by ignoring ethical principles
• “Gray-area” situations cause difficulty in
choosing the right, ethical course of
action
• Even when right choice is clear,
competitive pressure can lead to poor
managerial decisions
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How to Prevent Corporate Crime
• Establish and support a strong code of
ethics
– Written statement of ethical expectations
can be a powerful force in preventing
unethical or criminal behavior
– Research suggests that companies also
need to create an “ethical climate”
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How to Prevent Corporate Crime
• Hire with care
– Priority in hiring process
– Identify a guiding set of values
– Hire people who share values and can
work together
– Screening and integrity tests
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How to Prevent Corporate Crime
• Provide ethics training
– Ethics codes developed and posted for
employees to read
– Provide opportunities for discussion of
ethical decisions
– Offer formal training sessions
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How to Prevent Corporate Crime
• Develop Support for Whistle-Blowing
– Revealing wrongdoing within an
organization
– Three choices:
• Keep quiet and keep working
• Leave the situation
• Report the situation
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Total Person Insight
All that is necessary for evil to
triumph is for good men to do
nothing
Edmund Burke
Nineteenth-century English political
philosopher
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5 - 42
Not Easy!
• Whistle-blowing is not an easy path to
take
• You may be right, win your case, and
still lose friends and/or job
• Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002
– Illegal for employers at publicly held
companies to retaliate
– Criminal liability of executives
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Whistleblower Checklist
•
•
•
•
Is this the only way?
Do I have the goods?
Why am I doing this?
Am I ready?
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5 - 45
Values and Ethics in International Business
• Values and ethical choices are more
complicated at the international level
• All parties must recognize and attend to
value differences
• Encourage mutual understanding and
respect
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5 - 46
Values and Ethics in International Business
• Common ethical problems
– Bribery used to secure foreign contacts
– Human rights violations
– Lack of sensitivity to foreign customs
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Summary
• Strong sense of character grows from
personal standards of behavior
• Behaving according to values allows
you to maintain integrity
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5 - 48
Summary
• Values are the foundation for
– attitudes
– preferences
– opinions
– behavior
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Summary
• Values formed in early life and are
influenced by
– family
– religious beliefs
– schools
– the media
– role models
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Summary
• Internal conflicts arise when we must
choose between strongly held personal
values
• Conflicts with others are often based on
age, racial, religious, gender, or ethnic
differences
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5 - 51
Summary
• Value conflicts with others require
skilled interventions before they can be
resolved
• Clarified personal values make ethical
decisions easier
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5 - 52
Summary
• Shared values unifies employees by
providing guidelines for behavior and
decisions
• Corporate values and ethics are
receiving increased attention
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5 - 53
Summary
• Many organizations
– have ethics codes to help guide
employees’ behavior
– hire those who share their corporate values
and offer ethics training opportunities
• Growing international business presents
new ethical challenges
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